View Full Version : Oldest U.S Soldier Killed in Iraq
JUNKHO
05-15-2009, 05:13 AM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090514/ap_on_re_us/us_oldest_soldier_killed
+R.I.P.+
From Vietnam era to Iraq - highest respect
RIP
i hope hes not the one who enlisted after his son were killed in iraq, that would be sad.
rgjbloke
05-15-2009, 06:10 AM
I met a guy in a West London hotel last year around September/October who was an American army officer. He had just come back from Afghanistan. He was taking a holiday with his daughter for a few days before returning to afghanistan. He said he was only going back there for a few weeks before moving on. We had a brief chat before he left with his daughter to go out somewhere. He was quite an older guy for an active serviceman. I was surprised that he was still in at his age. I know it's an incredibly long shot but I hope it wasn't him, however, rest in peace to whoever it was who was killed in Iraq.
Breakfast in Vegas
05-15-2009, 07:11 AM
RIP Major Hutchinson and thank you for a lifetime of service.
SpecOpsGrandChild
05-15-2009, 09:20 AM
RIP Maj. Hutchinson.
baboon6
05-15-2009, 09:25 AM
I thought the oldest you could enlist in the US Army was 40. Are the rules different for those with prior service?
oldsoak
05-15-2009, 09:58 AM
Respect.
:-(
RIP Major.
click
05-15-2009, 10:06 AM
Rest in Peace Soldier :(
TDuck
05-15-2009, 10:28 AM
One of my dad's Buddies served in Vietnam. Basically drove supply trucks, between airfields. He decided to re-enlist just before the Gulf War in 1988. While in Kuwait he had Officers that would stare at that campaign ribbon and go; "Wow". "I may outrank him, but he knows his sh*t." He finally retired as a Sergeant Major in 1994. That got him 20 years of service, and the retirement pension.
\Walk tall brave soldier. You are one of the best.
scttgillies
05-15-2009, 10:31 AM
Rest in peace, soldier.
magicman
05-15-2009, 10:35 AM
R.I.P. Major
breki
05-15-2009, 01:07 PM
60 years old? Wow. RIP, Sir.
Rakkasans
05-15-2009, 01:20 PM
In the US, commissioned Officers are subject to involuntary recall to service until age 60 unless they have resigned their commission. In addition, a Doctor age 68 was recently allowed to go active duty again... but that was voluntary. There was a recent recall of a number of Army aviation Captains and Majors that retired since 1998. The needs of the service dictate...
T-5 Killer
05-15-2009, 01:31 PM
:( RIP Major
pvt ramirez
05-15-2009, 01:58 PM
my he rest i peace . he truly gave all to serve his country and he did his time . brave soldier he motivates me and inspires me . may he rest in peace
Gleipnir
05-15-2009, 04:54 PM
Rest in Peace
and thank you for such a long and dedicated service to your Country.
My condolences to the friends and family of this honourable man.
StukaJr
05-15-2009, 05:35 PM
Rest in Peace :| Loss of the Great man
Hispeed1
05-15-2009, 07:04 PM
RIP and much respect, read about this a while ago.
dave81
05-15-2009, 08:56 PM
During my first tour in Iraq I encountered quite a few Vietnam vets still serving. It was pretty weird to see combat patches like MACV or 9th ID, units that no longer exist (but are prominent in Vietnam-era movies).
Eknytz
05-15-2009, 09:08 PM
Very Honorable way to go if you ask me.
Rest In Peace
commanding
05-15-2009, 09:15 PM
Rest in Peace, sir.
sunnysandy
05-15-2009, 11:02 PM
R.I.P ......you are a inspiration to soldiers.
Karaahmetoglu
05-16-2009, 01:25 AM
Rest In Peace.
El Diablo Rojo
05-16-2009, 03:26 AM
Rest in peace.
dacanadianbomb
05-16-2009, 06:00 AM
Rest in Peace
scottyboy
05-16-2009, 09:15 AM
Rest in Peace.
LazerLordz
05-16-2009, 09:53 AM
RIP Major, you have served your nation well. The call of service is an admirable one that many will remember.
Deepest condolences to the Hutchinson family..
domokun
05-16-2009, 10:26 AM
Rest In Peace.
Irons
05-16-2009, 11:21 AM
Like an old Centurion passing; God, what a guy. At least he got a chance to "get some" one more time. He got to go the way he wanted to go. We should all be so lucky. Good on him!
(and before anybody here takes issue with the "get some" comment, just go ask any old Vietnam Vet; unfinished business is unfinished business, and the majority of them would like to. No it's not the same war, but you don't have to "understand." It's just there.)
Battlebuds
05-16-2009, 11:32 AM
Brave man, rest in peace.
JUNKHO
05-16-2009, 05:15 PM
(and before anybody here takes issue with the "get some" comment, just go ask any old Vietnam Vet; unfinished business is unfinished business, and the majority of them would like to. No it's not the same war, but you don't have to "understand." It's just there.)[/QUOTE]
X2
len173
05-16-2009, 06:08 PM
He gave a hell of alot to his country. RIP.
Niels
05-16-2009, 06:38 PM
Very Honorable way to go if you ask me.
He got to go the way he wanted to go. We should all be so lucky. Good on him!
I'm quite sure he would have prefered to die in his sleep, in his 80s, like everybody else, rather than getting killed by a roadside bomb.
Irons
05-16-2009, 06:45 PM
Different strokes for different folks. Some of us don't feel like we have to hang on to life with a death-grip, or sip it through a straw. Truthfully, there is really not much to it, and it's not really THAT cool. I don't think a man like that was the "I want to die in my sleep" type. He wanted to live his life the way that he wanted to, so he did, and for that he is blessed.
firemedic
05-17-2009, 12:49 PM
I'm quite sure he would have prefered to die in his sleep, in his 80s, like everybody else, rather than getting killed by a roadside bomb.............How naive.
firemedic
05-17-2009, 12:50 PM
I thought the oldest you could enlist in the US Army was 40. Are the rules different for those with prior service?..Yes. The rules are different for prior service.
Rad Resistance
05-17-2009, 05:21 PM
(and before anybody here takes issue with the "get some" comment, just go ask any old Vietnam Vet; unfinished business is unfinished business, and the majority of them would like to. No it's not the same war, but you don't have to "understand." It's just there.)
My father says this all the time, he wishes he could go back to fight.
Faecal Agitator
05-18-2009, 12:28 AM
RIP to a brave and committed patriot....a true public servant of the people.
Soldat_Américain
05-18-2009, 04:38 PM
RESPECT and RIP
pimabread
05-22-2009, 12:02 PM
to his life long service R.I.P
Soldat_Américain
06-05-2009, 10:29 AM
Here's an Article about him and the guys in his unit
Remembering Maj. Hutchison, oldest soldier killed in Iraq
Pranks, love of military life endeared 60-year-old major to fellow soldiers
By Teri Weaver (weavert@pstripes.osd.mil), Stars and Stripes
Mideast edition, Wednesday, May 27, 2009
BASRA, Iraq — Steven Hutchison wanted to be a grunt again. He wanted to help train Iraqi infantry units. He wanted back in the fight.
He called the Army and told them he’d like to rejoin. They’d take him, but they wanted him to do a year with a headquarters unit in Afghanistan before going back to infantry.
So the Army sent Maj. Steven Hutchison, at age 59, to Afghanistan for a year so that, at 60, he could go to Iraq. He was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 34th Armor Regiment, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division at Fort Riley, Kan.
His Afghanistan tour made him a few days late meeting his unit at Fort Riley. The soldiers — all 10 of them — were getting mad at their new boss for being late. They also had heard he was old.
"I thought 40-something, maybe 50," said Staff Sgt. Rivas Nestor, who, at 27, is the baby in the group.
They heard wrong.
Hutchison, of Scottsdale, Ariz., spent the next few months beating them at runs, hours at the gym and return trips to the dessert line. He won them over with profane stories and practical jokes. One example of his humor involved a tampon delicately hung from the front of an up-armored truck as recognition for exceptional work among his men.
When all else failed, he caught them in bear hugs and fed them butterscotch candies. His favorites were Werther’s Originals.
The Army had given him a variety of people including a communications expert, two intelligence guys, an engineer, a medic, a mechanic, an air defense soldier and one grunt like himself. There was also a finance officer who is still wondering why the Army picked him for the team.
Their mission? To improve policing and security standards among Iraqi coastal border guards.
"That’s right, the Army’s training a boat unit," said Sgt. 1st Class Damon Smith, 40, the medic.
The absurdity was not lost on Hutchison. Neither was the mission. He used Google and persistence to learn about boat piloting and navigation. He’d survived the Tet Offensive in Vietnam.
He could teach former Iraqi sailors at Umm Qasr how to counter smuggling on the Sha’at al Arab, the waterway that connects the Euphrates and Tigris rivers with the Persian Gulf.
"The guy knew what he needed to do," said Sgt. 1st Class David Rieckmann, 37, the communications soldier.
Spurred by 9/11
From Vietnam to Iraq, Hutchison had three marriages. He’d also earned a slew of degrees and ended up teaching psychology at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles. After 9/11, he wanted to rejoin. His wife wouldn’t have it. He spent the first few years of the war tending to her until she died from an illness.
"He said, ‘I met the love of my life. I’m not doing it again,’ " recalled Capt. Brandon Skinner, 31, the air defense officer.
Hutchison retired as a major in 1988, when Nestor was 7. Two decades later, he found himself in a different Army, one he thought paid too much attention to details that did little to make a good soldier.
It took him three months to put a sling on his weapon, an everyday requirement Hutchison couldn’t bear because it made the gun clink and clatter. The enemy will hear you, he would tell the younger guys.
He’d often strut to the shower in nothing more than tighty-whiteys, even with females around. When he passed younger soldiers on runs, he did so in non-regulation short-shorts, with pride. He never, ever secured his chin strap on his Kevlar helmet.
Once, he was so mad at the Army’s attention to uniform detail, he didn’t wear a T-shirt to a base ceremony.
"That was awesome," Nestor said. "Man, I laughed so much that day. He didn’t take any BS."
In one of his biggest capers, he adopted a dog. A stray crossed his path and from then on, Hutchison brought it scraps from breakfast, lunch and dinner. He wrote a memo authorizing the dog as a member of the unit and requesting it get shots from the base’s vet. He signed it himself.
Soon his boss, Col. Warren Perry, learned of the transgression. Hutchison merely did what so many soldiers do when caught breaking the rules: He lied.
He said he’d get rid of the dog, but he found the pooch a foster home. It didn’t work out. When he sneaked the dog — he’d named it Princess Leia — back on base, Perry was back on his case.
"I said, ‘They can only make you retire again, sir,’" Rieckmann said with a laugh.
While Hutchison kept busy training guards at Umm Qasr and playing jokes on his soldiers, his unit tried to figure ways to get back at him. The best, they said, would be if some big news outlet did a story on him. They loved him like a father, and they’d learned more about being a soldier under him than any previous officer. They also knew he’d be completely ticked to be in the spotlight.
‘They targeted him’
The best part of the story, his team said, was that this 60-year-old man’s training regimen was working. The coastal guards were doing a better job keeping the smuggling at bay. They were beginning to make a difference. For proof, they point to his death.
"They targeted him," Smith said of the criminals that planted the bomb. "It was a hit. It was due to his pushing. ... There’s so much crime and smuggling. They wanted him out."
It was Mother’s Day, May 10, two days before Hutchison was to go on leave. The team was leaving Umm Qasr after another day of work. The area hadn’t had a bomb in years.
But there was an explosion shortly after 2 p.m., followed by a burst of profanity from Hutchison. He’d been hit in the gut. His team got him out of his truck, set a perimeter and called for medical evacuation.
Hutchison asked for morphine and began talking about Vietnam.
After the helicopter left, the team stayed at the area as the wrecked truck was hauled away and another bomb, unexploded, was found. They finally made it back to camp around 10:30 p.m. They were exhausted, but not too worried. They’d been told Hutchison was stable.
But Perry met them later with the news. Hutchison had died.
"It was a lot to process," said Sgt. 1st Class Andrew Hunt, 31, one of the intelligence experts.
It still is.
"None of us are in the same place," Hunt said. "Some sleep. Some don’t."
The team stayed awake that night to accompany Hutchison’s body to the airfield for his flight home. They helped plan his memorial at Contingency Operating Base Basra. They even convinced the Army that Diana Ross and the Supremes’ "Someday We’ll Be Together" was patriotic enough for the ceremony.
CNN broadcast the news. As the Army’s oldest soldier killed in Iraq, Hutchison’s story wound up in newspapers across the country.
Hutchison’s team is ready to welcome his replacement, but don’t expect the new major to fill his shoes.
"It’s not gonna happen again," Nestor said.
One team member, Chief Warrant Officer 2 Elext Holmes, will speak at Fort Riley this week for another memorial ceremony. The team is working with a humane society to get Princess Leia shipped back home. Until then, she’ll be sleeping in Hutchison’s bed.
http://www.stripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=62942
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